Astronomers may have spotted the ghost galaxy that hit the Milky Way long ago

June 12, 2019
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The Milky Way survived a galactic hit and run millions of years ago — and astronomers may have finally found the culprit.

Ten years ago, astrophysicists Sukanya Chakrabarti and Leo Blitz of the University of California, Berkeley, suggested that ripples in the outer gas disk of the Milky Way were caused by a collision with a dwarf galaxy that shook the Milky Ways gas like a pebble dropped in a pond. The pair made predictions for how massive and distant the galaxy had to be, as well as roughly where it should be found. But none of the known dwarf galaxies that orbit the Milky Way fit the bill (SN: 4/4/15, p. 6).

Last year, astronomers using data from the Gaia space telescope discovered a new dwarf galaxy called Antlia 2, which has so few visible stars that its discoverers called it a hidden giant (SN Online: 5/9/18). Antlia 2s location is “stupidly close” to where Chakrabarti, now at the Rochester Institute of Technology in N.Y., and Blitz predicted that the offending dwarf galaxy should be today, sheRead More – Source